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Wiley InterScience

Journal of Microscopy

Journal of Microscopy

Volume 216 Issue 3, Pages 263 - 287

Published Online: 29 Nov 2004

Journal compilation © 2010 Royal Microscopical Society



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A method for determining void arrangements in inverse opals
C. F. BLANFORD*†, C. B. CARTER & A. STEIN
  Department of Chemistry, University of Minnesota, 139 Smith Hall, 207 Pleasant St SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, U.S.A.
  Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, 151 Amundson Hall, 421 Washington Ave. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, U.S.A.
 Correspondence to: C. Barry Carter. Tel.: +1 612 625 8805; fax: +1 612 626 7246; e-mail: carter@cems.umn.edu
 

*Present address: Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QR, U.K.

Copyright © 2004 The Royal Microscopical Society
KEYWORDS
3DOM • diffraction • electron crystallography • FFT • inverse opal • transmission electron microscopy

Summary

AbstractIntroductionMaterials and methodsResults and discussionSupplementary informationAcknowledgementsReferences

The periodic arrangement of voids in ceramic materials templated by colloidal crystal arrays (inverse opals) has been analysed by transmission electron microscopy. Individual particles consisting of an approximately spherical array of at least 100 voids were tilted through 90° along a single axis within the transmission electron microscope. The bright-field images of these particles at high-symmetry points, their diffractograms calculated by fast Fourier transforms, and the transmission electron microscope goniometer angles were compared with model face-centred cubic, body-centred cubic, hexagonal close-packed, and simple cubic lattices in real and reciprocal space. The spatial periodicities were calculated for two-dimensional projections. The systematic absences in these diffractograms differed from those found in diffraction patterns from three-dimensional objects. The experimental data matched only the model face-centred cubic lattice, so it was concluded that the packing of the voids (and, thus, the polymer spheres that composed the original colloidal crystals) was face-centred cubic. In face-centred cubic structures, the stacking-fault displacementvector is    . No stacking faults were observed when viewingthe inverse opal structure along the orthogonal <110>-type directions, eliminating the possibility of a random hexagonally close-packed structure for the particles observed. This technique complements synchrotron X-ray scattering work on colloidal crystals by allowing both real-space and reciprocal-space analysis to be carried out on a smaller cross-sectional area.


Received 10 July 2004; accepted 28 August 2004

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.0022-2720.2004.01421.x About DOI

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